The present invention is directed toward head-up display based safety devices for use in motor vehicles. The first aspect of the present invention is directed towards facilitating accurate driver operation of a driver operable device deployable in a motor vehicle without the need for a driver to turn his eyes downwards toward its control panel. This can be achieved by either providing an icon representative of the position of a driver's fingertip positioned for operating the driver operable device for superimposition on a head-up display image of the layout of its control panel, or employing a speech recognition module to issue output control signals in accordance with spoken commands. The second aspect of the present invention is directed toward projecting a head-up display image of a driver's rear field of vision including wireframe images of objects located therein.
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7. A safety device for use with at least one driver operable device deployable in a motor vehicle, said at least one driver operable device having a manually operable control panel with a display window, and a data output capability, the safety device comprising:
(a) a memory for storing a graphical near exact replica image of a driver operable device's control panel; (b) a head up display for projecting a head-up display image of said graphical near exact replica image with the same information as displayed in the device's display window; and (c) icon positioning apparatus for controlling the superimposition of a graphical icon representative of the position of a driver's fingertip for operating the driver operable device on said graphical near exact replica image.
1. A safety device for use with at least one driver operable device deployable in a motor vehicle, said at least one driver operable device having a manually operable control panel, and a display window, the safety device comprising:
(a) a memory for storing a graphical near exact replica image of a driver operable device's control panel; (b) a head-up display for projecting a head-up display image of said graphical near exact replica image; and (c) a plurality of finger position detection sensors deployed around at least a portion of the periphery of the driver operable device's control panel for continuously tracking the instantaneous position of a driver's fingertip with respect thereto for displaying a graphical icon representative of the position of the driver's fingertip with respect to the driver operable device's control panel on said graphical near exact replica image.
19. A safety device for use with a mobile telephone deployable in a motor vehicle, the mobile telephone having a control panel with an alphanumeric keypad for operating same and a display window for displaying information responsive to its operation, a data input capability for enabling remote driver operation, and a data output capability, the safety device comprising:
(a) a memory for storing a graphical image of a control panel including an alphanumeric keypad for operating the mobile telephone including the inputting of digits for their display on its display window; (b) a head up display for projecting a head-up display image of said graphical image with the same information as displayed in the mobile telephone's display window; and (c) a manually operated icon positioning apparatus deployed in the motor vehicle's interior for continuously controlling the instantaneous position of a graphical icon on said graphical image for remotely operating the mobile telephone.
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This application is a continuation application of International application number PCT/IL01/00522 filed Jun. 7, 2001 entitled SAFETY DEVICES FOR USE IN MOTOR VEHICLES, which designated the United States, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The invention in the field of safety devices for use in motor vehicles in general, and head-up display based safety devices for use in motor vehicles in particular.
Considerable efforts have been invested over the years to facilitate safe operation of driver operable devices during driving of motor vehicles.
Exemplary prior art references include:
U.S. Pat. No. 4,827,520 illustrates and describes a voice actuated control system for use in a motor vehicle. The control system includes a voice processing circuit and memory for storing data representing command words employed to perform control functions for vehicle accessories and for detecting spoken command words and providing data corresponding thereto. The control system also includes a display and control panel to selectively provide visual prompts to the operator and a manual control.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,555,502 illustrates and describes a control system for assisting the driver of a motor vehicle in selectively adjusting the various electronics components present within his vehicle. The control system includes a control panel containing a plurality of selection keys for selecting an adjustable feature from any component in his vehicle, a tactile control for adjusting the selected feature, and an electronics display for displaying information relevant to his operation of the various components. The display may be a head-up display for projecting a head-up display image onto the windshield.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,784,036 illustrates and describes a head-up display arrangement having touch sensors on control switches mounted inside a vehicle whereby, on detection of a user contact on a control switch, the image of the control switch which the driver contacted is displayed in such a manner as to distinguish it from the images of its neighbouring control switches which he did not contact, thereby enabling him to distinguish which control switch he contacted without having to turn his eyes downwards from the forward direction of his moving vehicle.
Japanese Patent Laid-open Publication No. 07-307775 (U.S. Pat. No. 6,091,376) illustrates and describes the deployment of a touch panel on a front windshield duplicating the actual control panel of a mobile telephone handset to negate the need that a driver has to turn his eyes downwards away from the forward direction of his moving motor vehicle towards the control switches in order to locate the actual control switch that he wishes to depress.
The present invention is directed toward head-up display based safety devices for use in motor vehicles. The first aspect of the present invention is directed towards facilitating accurate driver operation of a driver operable device deployable in a motor vehicle without the need for a driver to turn his eyes downwards toward its control panel, thereby impeding his control over his motor vehicle. This can be achieved by either providing an icon representative of the position of a driver's fingertip positioned for operating a driver operable device for superimposition on a head-up display image of the layout of its control panels, or by employing a speech recognition module to issue output control signals in accordance with spoken commands, thereby simplifying their operation in comparison to their conventional operation. The second aspect of the present invention is directed toward projecting a head-up display image of a driver's rear field of vision including wireframe images of objects located therein.
In order to understand the present invention and to see how it can be carried out in practice, preferred embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which similar parts are likewise numbered, and in which:
The data processing device 9 is connected to finger position detection sensors 17 (constituting icon positioning apparatus) deployed on the cradle 3 for continuously tracking the position of the fingertip of typically a driver's forefinger positioned to operate the mobile telephone 2 for automatically displaying an icon representative of his fingertip on a head-up display image of a near exact replica of the mobile telephone's actual control panel on detection of his forefinger approaching same. Similarly, the data processing device 9 is connected to finger position detection sensors 18 deployed around the periphery of the radio cassette player 7 for automatically displaying an icon representative of his fingertip on a head-up display image of a near exact replica of the radio cassette's actual control panel on detection of his forefinger approaching same. The layout of the control panels of the various driver operable devices can be downloaded, for example, via an infrared port 19 from a CD, the Internet, and the like for storage in a memory 21 (see FIG. 2). Typical finger position detector sensors include inter alia electro-optical sensors, ultra sound sensors, and the like.
Rather than provisioning an icon positioning apparatus adjacent to each driver operable device whose manual operation is to be facilitated by way of the safety device 8, a single icon positioning apparatus can be employed for same purpose of continuously tracking a driver's fingertip for automatically displaying an icon representative thereof on a head-up display image of near exact replicas of their corresponding actual control panels on detection of his forefinger approaching same. Such an icon positioning apparatus could be implemented in the form of a TV camera deployed on the inside of the motor vehicle's roof and downwardly directed towards the motor vehicle's driver console.
In the case of the mobile telephone 2, since on the one hand, the position of the driver's fingertip is known, and, on the other hand, the depression of one of its pushbuttons can be detected by virtue of it issuing a beep or similar audible indication, the data processing device 9 can also determine which pushbuttons have been depressed by the driver for displaying at least the digits of a telephone number entered on the mobile telephone's control panel for display in the head-up display image 14.
The safety device 8 can also include a rear facing TV camera 22 (constituting an image acquisition apparatus) deployed for acquisitioning an image of the driver's rear field of vision for processing by an image processing module 23 for rendering wireframe images of objects located in the image of the driver's rear field of vision for inclusion in a head-up display image of the driver's rear field of vision. The image processing module 23 typically employs conventional image processing techniques for edge detection. The head-up display 11 preferably automatically displays the head-up display image of the driver's rear field of vision when the motor vehicle 1 is put into reverse gear.
The operation of the safety device 8 is now described:
In the case that a driver wishes to safely make a telephone call while driving, he proceeds to start dialing the desired telephone number whereupon the position of his forefinger relative to the mobile telephone's control panel (see
Alternatively, the driver can issue spoken commands to remotely operate the mobile telephone 26 or one of the components of the in-car audio center 27. For example, the spoken command "DIAL NUMBER" and then a recitation of digits, for example, "NINE, TWO, FOUR . . . ." would be the equivalent of consecutively depressing the pushbuttons 924 on the mobile telephone's actual control panel (see FIGS. 14A and 14B). Similarly, the spoken command "CD PLAYER" and "PLAY DISC TWO" could be programmed to start playing the second CD stacked in the CD player. In the case of voice activation of one of the driver operable devices, no icon representative of the position of the driver's finger would be displayed but the head-up display would preferably display the same information on the device's display window on the appropriate head-up display image.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, it will be appreciated that many variations, modifications, and other applications of the invention can be made within the scope of the appended claims. For example, in the same motor vehicle, one or more driver operable devices may be manually operated whilst one or more other driver operable devices may be remotely operated. Furthermore, the same driver operable device may be both manually and remotely operable for back-up reasons.
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